Writing · Leasing & Conversion
At 9:30AM, She Noticed the Problem. By Noon, We Found $8,000 in Fraud.
Fraud isn’t just about bad people.
It’s about lazy systems.
We once took a “superstar” property manager out for steak.
Gifted him a cash bonus & race tickets for winning the Manager of the Year.
Thanked him for crushing it.
Meanwhile, he was kiting blank money orders.
Spread across multiple residents.
Looked clean.
How did we catch him?
He went on vacation.
Our roving manager noticed the several blank money orders.
Several Hispanic residents asked him to fill out their rental money orders for them.
Then there was “Mr. Mercedes.”
Another “superstar.”
Boosted occupancy.
Increased collections.
But bad debt spiked.
An audit traced a $1,000 money order into another bank account—under our apartment name he had opened.
He was stealing rent to make payments on his Mercedes.
Another time, a leasing agent faked resident referrals.
Split the bonus with her friend.
Forgot to tell the new resident she lied.
When you’ve been doing this long enough, you stop being surprised.
Fraud doesn’t look like a crook.
It can look like a “top performer.”
You don’t prevent fraud with pep talks.
You prevent it with strong systems.
If you aren’t:
Spot checking AR balances weekly
Verifying money orders match real resident names
Reviewing referral bonuses against signed leases
Cross-checking rent discounts and specials
Auditing gift cards and concessions
Requiring approvals for write-offs
Tracking voided and reversed payments
Having outside operational audits of ledgers monthly
…then you’re not managing. It can happen in all areas of your business.
Fraud isn’t rare.
Opportunity makes it common.
Strong systems can make it rare